your take on this -- MTR2000 vs GR1225
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your take on this -- MTR2000 vs GR1225
hey y'all
I have gotten tasked with yet another project... look at the feasibility of keeping our current repeater (mtr2000) or replacing it with a Gr1225...
I dont know a whole lot yet about the MTR thats currently in place but i have seen it briefly and it looks at least 4 yrs old... what i need to know is parts still available, cost factor in repairing versus just replacing the unit....
need a quick and dirty answer so that i can give my boss one
thanks
john
I have gotten tasked with yet another project... look at the feasibility of keeping our current repeater (mtr2000) or replacing it with a Gr1225...
I dont know a whole lot yet about the MTR thats currently in place but i have seen it briefly and it looks at least 4 yrs old... what i need to know is parts still available, cost factor in repairing versus just replacing the unit....
need a quick and dirty answer so that i can give my boss one
thanks
john
- psapengineer
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- Joined: Thu Oct 07, 2004 10:00 am
MTR2000
The MTR2000 is still being manufactured today; it is a current product. It is also capable of meeting the next narrow-banding step for the FCC. It is in my opinion a better quality repeater than the GR1225. Clearly, keep it.
Regards, Bob
Regards, Bob
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- Posts: 33
- Joined: Mon Sep 22, 2003 11:13 am
GAT A2 SKI wrote:What is the cost factor on repair and servicing the MTR????
John
The MTR2000 is not considered 'field repairable' by Motorola. Repair consists of swapping the defective part with the applicable FRU (field replaceable unit). The power supply module, PA module & receiver module are all examples of a FRU. The pricing is going to vary according to which FRU you need, and whether your organisation has any sort of pricing agreement with Motorola. Honestly though, your MTR could very well run another 10 years with nary a problem. They are super reliable continuous duty units. I'd take one 4-year old unit over two NEW GR1225 units any day.
Todd
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Welcome to the /\/\achine.
Welcome to the /\/\achine.
Lets try this... Is there something wrong with the MTR right now?? If it is working fine, then LEAVE IT. You would be downgrading to put a GR1225 in it's place. If you are having problems, don't just assume it is the repeater. There are a lot of failure points that can cause general poor performance....
Power supply
Wireing from P/S to radio
And local mics or tone remotes
Coax & connectors from radio to duplexor
Coax & connectors from duplexor to antenna
Lightning protection equipment
Antenna itself
Grounding of all of the above
Proper mounting of all of the above.
Power supply
Wireing from P/S to radio
And local mics or tone remotes
Coax & connectors from radio to duplexor
Coax & connectors from duplexor to antenna
Lightning protection equipment
Antenna itself
Grounding of all of the above
Proper mounting of all of the above.
"I'll eat you like a plate of bacon and eggs in the morning. "
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eBay at it's finest:
Me: "What exactly is a 900Mhz UHF CB?"
Them: "A very nice CB at 900Mhz speed!"

- Some loser on rr.com
eBay at it's finest:
Me: "What exactly is a 900Mhz UHF CB?"
Them: "A very nice CB at 900Mhz speed!"

..
here's my take
whoever recommended to you that you should/could/might replace the MTR with the GR1225 needs a nice swift shot in the nutz
or if it's a girl, a punch in the boob.
honestly, it's absolutely silly to put those two products in the same league.
one is designed for PUBLIC SAFETY demands (MTR)
the other is designed for mobile job-site construction / farm comms
doug
whoever recommended to you that you should/could/might replace the MTR with the GR1225 needs a nice swift shot in the nutz
or if it's a girl, a punch in the boob.
honestly, it's absolutely silly to put those two products in the same league.
one is designed for PUBLIC SAFETY demands (MTR)
the other is designed for mobile job-site construction / farm comms
doug
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- MSS-Dave
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- What radios do you own?: Harris XL200M. XPR7550E, NX300
I have a lot of experience with both and I was going to comment but I think Batdude summed it up better than I could...whoever recommended to you that you should/could/might replace the MTR with the GR1225 needs a nice swift shot in the nutz


GR1225 = Radius low tier
MTR2000 = mid tier public safety rated
Quantar = high tier public safety rated
You'se gets whats 'ya pay for!
Dave
Well...Ex /\/\SS.
Well, I guess I made the right desision.
When I first saw this question I thought "Hey, I could offer to trade this guy a BRAND NEW GR1225 for that four year old MTR P.O.S."
The thing is - my folks took me to church every Sunday, I was in the Boy Scouts, etc. Just couldn't bring myself to do it.
Besides - the rest of you wouldn't have let me get away with it anyway.
Oh, well....
When I first saw this question I thought "Hey, I could offer to trade this guy a BRAND NEW GR1225 for that four year old MTR P.O.S."
The thing is - my folks took me to church every Sunday, I was in the Boy Scouts, etc. Just couldn't bring myself to do it.
Besides - the rest of you wouldn't have let me get away with it anyway.
Oh, well....
Definately keep the MTR.... after working with both for a while now, the MTR DEFINATELY is a much better repeater than the 1225 could ever hope to be. Even if you add just about every single option to the 1225, the MTR is still better all around.
Motorola sells the 1225 with an optional 100W amp (which is TPL). With the MTR, it's built in.
The receiver on the MTR is also light years ahead of the 1225.
The MTR also fits in a much smaller rack footprint than the 1225 when configured with the 100W option.
Configuration wise, the MTR gives you much more versatility than the 1225 as well.
Kurt
Motorola sells the 1225 with an optional 100W amp (which is TPL). With the MTR, it's built in.
The receiver on the MTR is also light years ahead of the 1225.
The MTR also fits in a much smaller rack footprint than the 1225 when configured with the 100W option.
Configuration wise, the MTR gives you much more versatility than the 1225 as well.
Kurt
I am <I>NOT</I> Hamsexy